Programming/JavaScript/General Syntax

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Note: Common File Extensions: .js


General Language Notes

  • String single and double quotes are interchangeable.
  • Semi-colons required.
  • Variable casing: camelCase.
  • Variables are loosely typed.
  • Scope controlled at variable creation.

Comments

Inline Comments

// This is an inline comment.

Block Comments

/**
 * This is a block comment.
 * Comment line 2.
 * Another block comment line.
 */

Basic Input and Output

Basic Output

The following will output a single line:

console.log('Hello World!');

The following will output multiple lines:

console.log('This is a test.');
console.log('This is line #2');
console.log('Outputting 3 lines total.');


Basic Input

Variables

Variable Declaration

let aBool = true;
let bBool = false;
let myVar1 = "This is ";
let myVar2 = "a string.";

Variable Usage

// Print some variables, as-is.
console.log('Printing variable values.');
console.log(aBool);
console.log(bBool);

// Print two variables concatenated together.
console.log(myVar1 + myVar2);
// Alternatively.
console.log(`${myVar1} ${myVar2}`);

// Combine two variables, then print the result.
myVar3 = myVar1 + myVar2;
console.log(myVar3);

Booleans

let trueBool = true;
let falseBool = false;

Null Values

JavaScript uses the standard null.

let nullValue = null;

Variable Scope

JavaScript has unique variable scope handling.
Aka, controlling where the variable can and cannot be accessed from.
This is controlled by the combination of how and where a variable is declared from.

The "var" Keyword

The original, default way to declare a variable was through var. IE:

var myVar;

This has a few quirks compared to most languages. In summary:

  • Any var declaration is processed before any other code, regardless of where it's declared.
    • A side-effect is that a variable declared this way can be referenced BEFORE it's actually declared. The result is that it will be "undefined" until it's actually declared.
  • The scope of var variables automatically includes all inner scopes, such as nested functions.
    • If the variable is declared outside of any given scope, then it's automatically global.

The result is that larger files can easily have variables with unclear or hard to manage scope. Thus, using var is not generally recommended.

See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/var for full documentation on exact properties.

The "let" and "const" Keywords

The let and const keywords are newer ways to declare variables in JavaScript.

The const keyword is used to declare an unchanging constant.
The let keyword is used to create a variable that can change after declaration.

For both of these, the scope is much smaller than var.
These declarations will only be visible within the code blocks they're defined within. This includes things like if statements. For example:

// Checking scope of variable x and y.
function() {
    let x = 5;

    // Can see x. y not declared yet.
    if (true) {
        let y = 2;

        // Can see x and y.
    } else {
        // Can see x, but not y.
    }

    // Can see x, but not y.
}

Generally, this scope handling is considered safer and more predictable. Thus it's now the preferred way to declare JavaScript variables.


Import Statements

If Statements

Note that JavaScript's {{{1}}} is effectively equivalent to other language's {{{1}}}, as far as conditional statements go.

Basic If

if (x === y) {
    # Logic if true.
}

Full If

if (x === y) {
    # Logic if true.
} else if (! x && (y || z) {
    # Logic for "else if" true.
} else {
    # Logic for false.
}

Ternary Operators

An alternative, if less-immediately-clear way to write if statements is to use "ternary operator" shorthand.

Syntax is as follows:

<conditional_statement> ? <true_clause> : <false_clause>

As an example:

x == y ? console.log('x and y match!') : console.log('x and y DO NOT match...');

Switch/Case Statements

General syntax is:

switch (<conditional_statement>) {
    case <result_1>:
        # Logic if matches <result_1>.
        break;
    case <result_2>:
        # Logic if matches <result_2>.
        break;

    ...

    default:
        # Default/fallback if matched no results.
        break;
}

Note that the break statements are optional, but recommended. Removing a break statement will make the code execute into the next result section, instead of exiting the switch block.


Functions

Basic Template

/**
 * Function description here.
 * @param <variable_name> <variable_description>
 * @return <return_val_description>
 */
function <function_name>(arg1, arg2, ..., argN) {
    # Function logic here.

    ...

    # If function has a return value, then return it with the following.
    return <variable_here>;
}

Examples

Basic example:

function myFunc() {
    # Function logic here.
}

Example with arguments.

function argFunc(my_int, my_string, some_other_arg) {
    # Function logic here.
}

Example of arguments with defaults.
Defaults will be used if no corresponding arg is provided, OR if the provided arg is undefined when the function is called.

function argFunc(my_int = 5, my_string = 'Example string', some_other_arg = true) {
    # Function logic here.
}

Arrow Functions

Arrow function notation is a function syntax specific to JavaScript.
It tends to be very common, so it's good to know.
Other than being syntactically different, it gives the same effect as standard functions.

Note: If a function takes exactly one parameter, then parens are not needed in the first line. However, any functions that take either zero or multiple parameters require parens. For consistency, it's probably best to always write the parens.

Basic format:

const <function_name> = (<arg1>, <arg2>, ..., <argN>) => {
    # Function logic here.
}

Alternatively, a "condensed" format can be used if the function only needs a single line:

const <function_name> = (<arg1>, <arg2>, ..., <argN>) => # Single line here;

For example:

const myCondensedFunc = (name, age) => console.log(`I am ${name} and I am ${age} years old.`);